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Saturday, 27 October 2012

Canonical,
the company that develops Ubuntu, has made it clear that it set its
target on mobile devices, working to make the Linux distribution as
mobile-friendly as possible. Among other initiatives, Canonical has made
the Google Nexus 7 a reference device for Ubuntu, to help developers
optimize the distro for ARM touch-based devices.
Now, Canonical
has released a tool to help users and developers easily install a full
version of Ubuntu on the Nexus 7. The only prerequisite is to have an
unlocked bootloader, but, if you’re interested in running Linux, I don’t
think that would be a problem.
The idea behind the installer is
to allow regular folks to run Ubuntu on their tablet, so developers can
get a feel of what works and what needs improving. As such, expect a
fair number of bugs and glitches, and more importantly, make sure to
report them to Canonical so devs learn about them. Among the kinks that
need ironing out at this point, the most severe seem related to memory
consumption, rotation, and scrolling issues; the webcam and the
Bluetooth don’t work either. A full list of problems is available here.
To give the installer a try, head to this link. Note that you will lose all your data, but it’s easy to return to stock Android if you want to.
Are you interested in the convergence of Linux and Android? Would you like to run Ubuntu on your Nexus device?